Brief
History from wikipedia:
Clay County was named
for the county for Henry Clay of Kentucky
by the Territorial Legislature. It was
organized on
August 10, 1866 by J. B. Quimby;
William Payne; Moses Yonkings; George D.
Seabury; Lorenzo Gates; John G. Haynes;
and Joseph P. Ryan. Lorenzo Gates
and William Silvers have descendants
living in the county. Clay County holds
the cities
of Clay Center, Clifton (part),
Green, Longford, Morganville, Oak Hill,
Vining (part) and Wakefield.
Indian outbreaks from
1857 and 1864 forced the early settlers
out of the county. The establishment of
the English settlement
of Wakefield Colony in 1869, brought
not only these new people to the county,
but their expertise in farming contributed
greatly to the agriculture of the
area.
Because the Republican
River bisects the county from northwest to
southwest, bridges were of major
importance in the
county's history. The first bridge
was built near Clay Center in 1875; the
second at Vining, 1880; and the remaining
bridges
were built at Wakefield,
Morganville, and Broughton.
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